How can that be? It's up on their website. I expect one can buy copies of transcripts or the recording of the actual show.
Well, I meant while you were on the radio in real-time. I just saw your link to it in Press.
There's a lady plays her fav'rite records/On the jukebox ev'ry day/All day long she plays the same old songs/And she believes the things that they say/She sings along with all the saddest songs/And she believes the stories are real/She lets the music dictate the way that she feels.
How can that be? It's up on their website. I expect one can buy copies of transcripts or the recording of the actual show.
Well, I meant while you were on the radio in real-time. I just saw your link to it in Press.
Yeah, I think Spacey's gonna find out he's no longer top of the heap in the hard way on this movie.
Fiona -- sorry, I get it now. The song is just a fantasia on the name, which rhymes with many things, like "not an iota" and "reaching my quota" and "no Nino Rota." It also has the only reference to the Pantone color system I can think of in pop music, though my knowledge is not as encyclopedic as some. Speaking of which...
Hec, I am so looking forward to hearing you geek out on the radio, oh-whoa-oh-oh, on the radio! I will have to stream it this evening.
Build your own Gramophone: [link] that records on to CDs. Manually, by scratching grooves into them.
That Very Cool Things site that they reference is actually my friend's store. Very cool for getting anime, Japanese movies, j-pop, and the like. Thus the name.
Just not the same. Of course, for such a little-known song, there's been an awful lot of renditions. We hvae the Modern Lovers version, which is the original. I think there were a couple others, too.
John Cale's version is pretty famous. There was also a very good version done for REPO MAN, but I can't remember (if I ever knew) who did that version. I found Bowie's version AWFUL! And I like most of that album otherwise.
The Repo Man soundtrack version is the version by Burning Sensations.
I finally head the John Cale version recently, after hearing the Modern Lovers and Burning Sensations versions about a billion times. I didn't like the Cale version at all....
And FAQ Girl and I listened to David on NPR yesterday and I laughed at the buffista-shout-out story David told about the "friend" buying a Go-Betweens CD and the clerk getting all excited.
That was for you, tina! Happy Thanksgiving. Miss you.
I'm listening to it right now AIFG!! Power to music lovers! I miss you, too. Happy Thanksgiving Weekend Still Kinda. I loooved the shout out and the great interview. I totally e-mailed the link to some friends all "the girl in the record-store story is MEMEME - I'm famous!"
Sidenote: I just finished up a Turkey-Day-Weekend season 7 marathon watch (overall, much much better on rewatch but the commentaries were again lackluster). And decided to read some old Buffy posts from TT (starting with Mejia's Mejia of The Gift previously-on since I hadn't seen it on original airing and just finished up my marathon with it from the easter egg on the S7 DVDs. Amazing. (Mejia's scary and wonderful brain, I mean.)). Anyway. I was loving me some end-of-season-5 Buffista posts and then I caught up over here and saw this. I feel all glowy.
Mr. Boucher, Jon's site with the linernote links is [link]
This is so very cool: Music mimics the composer's native language.
And this: The building blocks of music are to be found in speech.
Some interesting stuff in those articles, although musicologist FAQ Girl says that this
musicologists have long emphasized that while each culture stamps a special identity onto its music, music itself has some universal qualities. For example, in virtually all cultures sound is divided into some or all of the 12 intervals that make up the chromatic scale -- that is, the scale represented by the keys on a piano.
is a gross generalisation.You need only look to Eastern countries like India to find huge exceptions to that "universal" quality.